SEB's China Financial Index rises: Northern European companies see better business climate, higher profits and accelerated expansion plans

All parameters in SEB`s China Financial Index - business climate, profit expectations, investment plans and recruitment plans - are higher, and the index climbs to 61.4 in March from 58 in September.

China`s economy continued to slow during 2013. GDP growth lost momentum in last year`s the fourth quarter, and both export figures and confidence indices have started this year pointing to lower economic activity. However, Nordic and German business leaders continue to stay bullish, according to SEB`s latest China Financial Index. Around half of the top managers surveyed expect a positive business climate and higher profits in the coming six months. Only 6% have a negative view while less than half expect business conditions and profits to remain the same. More companies than previously (over a half) are planning further investments and recruitments.

The number of companies that see lower customer demand as a main concern continues to fall to 27 percent, down from 38 percent since the last survey in September. Meanwhile, one out of four companies view competition as their largest worry, which is the same as in the last survey. One of five companies now finds lack of competent staff as its biggest headache.

"Companies have gained optimism since the last survey, even if changes are fairly modest. What surprises me most is that fewer companies now view deteriorating customer demand as their main worry. Every parameter in the survey is up, which indicates an improving business climate in China. A key reason our index may move in the opposite direction to other surveys is that we only do it every six months. This means it captures more medium-term sentiment," says Fredrik Hähnel, Head of SEB in Shanghai and author of the report.

Even if the Chinese economy grew faster than other leading economies, the country has experienced slowing growth in 10 out of the last 12 quarters. Growth for the fourth quarter 2013 ended up at 7.7 percent, down from 7.8 percent in the third quarter. China`s official purchasing managers` index hit an eight-month low in February at 50.2, adding signs of a slowing economy. The new political leadership has met plenty of challenges during its first year in power, with fast credit growth, falling capital allocation efficiency, severe environmental problems and an urgent need to reform the financial sector. At the party congress in Beijing last week, Prime Minister Li Keqiang repeated a GDP target of 7.5 percent for 2014 and reiterated that reforms will accelerate.

"Many are concerned with China`s overcapacity and fast credit growth. However, these factors have obviously not changed Northern European companies view of the market. On the contrary, half of the companies expect business to improve in 2014, and they continue to invest," says Fredrik Hähnel.